SPECIES DISTRIBUTION THREATS Globally Threatened Quercus Alpestris Boiss

SPECIES DISTRIBUTION THREATS Globally Threatened Quercus Alpestris Boiss

SPECIES DISTRIBUTION THREATS Globally threatened Quercus alpestris Boiss. Sierra de las Nieves Overgrazing, loss of habitat, erosion Quercus alnifolia Poech Troodos Mountains, Cyprus Fire, overgrazing, felling, human development Quercus aucheri Jaub. & Aegean region and Anatolia (Turkey) Small isolated populations Spach Quercus ilex L. subsp. Portugal and Spain Fire, over grazing, loss of ballota (Desf.) Samp. habitat Quercus pontica K. Koch Georgia and Turkey Overgrazing Quercus robur L. subsp. Georgia and Russia Felling and loss of habitat imeretina (Steven ex Woronow) Menitsky Quercus vulcanica Boiss. & Isparta province (Turkey) Few isolated populations Heldr. ex Kotschy Least concern Quercus brantii Lindl. Turkey Quercus cerris L. Central, East and Southeast Europe, Turkey Quercsu coccifera L. Mediterranean region Quercus dalechampii Ten. Central, East and Southeast Europe Quercus frainetto Ten. Southern and Central Italy, Balkan Peninsula, Northwest Turkey Quercus ilex L. Mediterranean region Quercus infectoria Oliv. Greece Quercus ithaburensis Southeastern Italy to Eastern Decne. Mediterranean Quercus libani Oliv. Turkey Quercus petraea (Matt.) Europe Liebl. Quercus petraea (Matt.) Southern France and North Spain Liebl. subsp. huguetiana Franco & G. López Quercus robur L. Europe Quercus pubescens Willd. Eastern, Central and Southern Europe, Northern Turkey Quercus suber L. Western Mediterranean Basin Table LLst oI threatened sSecLes accordLnJ to the IUCN Oldʏeld and EastZood 108 Endangered Oak Resources in Europe and Around the Mediterranean Basin: Marginal Populations and Minor Species Alexis Ducousso UMR BIOGECO, INRA 69 route d’Arcachon F-33610 Cestas, France Phone: +33.(0)5.57.12.28.28 Fax: +33.(0)5.57.12.28.81 [email protected] ABSTRACT Oaks are common species in Europe and around the Mediterranean Basin where they are a major component of forest ecosystems and economy. According to Govaerts and Frodin (1998) this region hosts 29 species and taxa. We will ʏrst try to establish a tentative list of species. ȍTryȎ because oaks form a complex of species that does not ʏt the classical deʏnition of a species. We will then look at the different threats that exist at both population and species level, reviewing climate change, new emergent diseases, human impact (forestry practices, overgrazing, ʏre, housing, and so forth), endemism, etc. We will focus on climate change and the risk of introduction of Ceratocystis fagacearum (Bretz) Hunt. Oaks from warm and dry climates are key species for the future because they have a high adaptation potential due to high genetic diversity, high gene ʐow within and between species and large genetic diversity. Today, several marginal populations and rare species like Quercus crenata Lam. or Q. sicula Borzi are endangered. We will propose different strategies for adaptation and conservation of these valuable and noble trees. .eyZords: European oaks Quercus, taxonoPy biodiYersity genetic resources threat 109 Introduction In Europe, oaks are a major forest component from the Mediterranean Basin to southern Scandinavia and from Ireland to the Ural Mountains. Even if Europe doesn’t host the high diversity of oaks found in North America and Southeast Asia, there is nevertheless important diversity. Oaks are a major component of many different ecosystems: plain forest, riparian forest, Mediterranean scrublands, calcareous plateaus. Today, oaks in Europe are subject to different threats. The aim of this paper is to list European oak diversity and then to review the main threats facing it. Oaks in Europe and around the Mediterranean Basin How many species? We have established the European oaks list from two sources: the World Checklist and Bibliography of Fagales (Govaerts and Frodin, 1998) that can be consulted on the Kew Garden website http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/home.do and Cristofolini and Crema, 2005. According to this source, Europe hosts 29 species divided into 44 taxa. 11 species belong to section Cerris and 18 species to section Quercus. This list is not satisfactory because the deʏnition of a species that is used is based only on morphological criteria. Oaks form a complex of species with intense gene ʐow between species and therefore clear-cut divisions between species are difʏcult to establish. This remark can be illustrated with two examples First, the natural ranges of Quercus ilex L. and Q. rotundifolia Lam. overlap widely. In this overlapping zone, we can observe a gradient from pure Quercus ilex L. to pure Q. rotundifolia Lam. Lumaret et al. (2002) observed a discrepancy between morphology and 1/ Quercus crenata, )rance 1 molecular variations. The authors explain that morphological variation is an adaptive response to climate not a taxonomical differentiation between two species The second example is Q. crenata Lam. This species is accepted as a species since 2005 (Cristofolini and Crema, 2005) but the status of this taxon is not clear. The hybrid origin of this taxon (Q. cerris L. × Q. suber L.) is well established (Conte et al., 2009) but the hybrid status is not clear because it may be a ʏxed hybrid or it may represent the offspring of current hybridization between the two parental species or both (Cristofolini and Crema, 2005). If it is a ʏxed hybrid, it must be considered a species and therefore maintained in this list, if not, it must be removed. 110 Endangered Oak Resources in Europe and Around the Mediterranean Basin: Marginal Populations and Minor Species Distribution For oaks we observe a classical gradient of biodiversity from the Mediterranean region to northern Europe. In the north we ʏnd only 2 species (Q. robur L. and Q. petraea (Matt.) Liebl.); in the intermediate zone 5 species (Q. petraea, Q. robur, Q. pubescens Willd., Q. pyrenaica Willd. and Q. cerris L.) and all of the 29 species and 44 taxa are found in the south of Europe which is a key region for oaks Threat levels Biodiversity has three levels: ecosystemic, speciʏc and genetic. In this section we will look at examples of threat for oaks at each of these levels. Ecosystemic An ecosystem can disappear through destruction or degradation. In Europe, some forest ecosystems have dramatically regressed: temperate broad-leaved forest (75%), Mediterranean forest (78%), riparian forest (90%) (Halkka and Lappalainen, 2001). In these forests, oaks are frequently dominant 6peciʏc Several oaks species are endangered. Oldʏeld and Eastwood (2007) have recorded 7 oak taxa threatened throughout Europe and 14 taxa of least concern (Table 1). However, this list is not satisfactory because: (i) the nomenclature needs to be updated; (ii) several endangered species are missing (Q. aucheri Jaub. & Spach., Q. brantii Lindl., Q. canariensis Willd., Q. crenata Lam. and Q. sicula Borzi ex Lojac.) and, (iii) there is no clear distinction between the different risk categories. IUCN has identiʏed different threats: loss of habitat, overgrazing and felling, endemism, ʏre, etc. In this paper, we have retained only three examples of threat: climate change, pathological problems and endemism. Genetic The two mains threats on the genetic level are 1) genetic drift and 2) genetic transfer. 1. Genetic drift Is the change in the frequency of a gene variant or allele in a population due to random sampling between generations. Genetic drift may cause gene variants to disappear completely and thereby reduce genetic variation. Marginal populations are at high risk because many of them are disappearing, they have very often less than 2,000 breeding individuals and are isolated. Genetic drift could impoverish diversity because gene ʐow could not compensate for this loss due to this isolation. Marginal populations are concentrated on the outer edges of natural ranges. Southern margins host thermophilic and drought resistant populations that have high adaptation potential regarding current climatic change. The genetic resources of these populations could be very useful for boosting adaptation of populations in central Europe. 2. Genetic transfer Foresters resort to planting because of lack of natural regeneration or in their eagerness to increase productivity. Most often though genetic resources used for this regeneration are not local. This exogenous source of genetic material is the main disturbance of genetic diversity (Lesur, 1999). Lesur has studied genetic resources in the 600 compartments of the national forest of Compiègne (France) with cpDNA markers. She found that since the 70s, the provenance of most plantations has a very distant geographical origin. About 20% 111 of the regeneration comes from eastern Europe. This study reveals that genetic transfer is a major disturbance for the distribution of genetic diversity. Nevertheless we must not consider these plantations only from a negative point of view. They could increase local genetic diversity and therefore enhance oak adaptability to current climate change. On the other hand, they raise a major problem for conserving the genetics resources of sessile and pedunculate oaks that would also represent a loss of adaptive capacity. Origin of risk: global changes Human impact housing, ʏre, overgra]ing, plantation These threats are often cited as major concerns for oaks, although for the most part without clear studies to corroborate such claims. They are well documented only at forest level. There is a tendency in Europe to artiʏcialize lands through, for example, urbanization. In France 1,380,000 ha were urbanized between 1982-2003 (Pointerau and Coulon, 2009). Forest

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